PSYCHOTHERAPY & COUNSELING VIDEOS

Learning therapy without watching videos is like learning to play the flute by reading a book about Mozart.

The most direct and affordable way to up your game, with over 300 videos to help you be the best therapist you can be.

Therapy is a unique profession—in that we often learn our craft without ever watching others do therapy. Maybe you’ve seen boring videos of “talking heads” and have been turned off. Our videos are different—we show the most talented therapists in session, discussing the nuances of their work, and teaching you how to be better. Psychotherapy.net Videos are the most direct and affordable way up your game. And now we make it even easier for you, with multiple options to suit your needs and budgets.

Featured Videos…

The suicidal client is perhaps the single greatest clinical and ethical challenge for even the most seasoned mental health professional. In this, the first of a compelling three-volume series, John Sommers-Flanagan artfully teaches through live clinical demonstration how to effectively and collaboratively assess and intervene when sitting face-to-face with suicidal clients. In this video he works with a divorced mother suffering from depression, and a 22-year-old college student and veteran of the Iraq war who is struggling with family issues and alcohol use.

Learn from seasoned family therapist Monica McGoldrick how bringing family-of-origin issues into couples therapy can help you pinpoint the root of the problem, make more targeted interventions, and ultimately “unstick” a couple struggling with insecurity and distrust.

In this first volume of our new series, The DSM 5 and Psychodiagnostic Interviewing, Jason Buckles and Victor Yalom take a nuanced and critical look at psychiatric diagnosis and the DSM-5, and then demonstrate in a step-by-step manner the components and skills necessary to do a diagnostic interview.
Part of the 4-video series: The DSM-5 and Psychodiagnostic Interviewing

In volume 2 of our DSM-5 and Psychodiagnostic Interviewing series, learn how to obtain essential diagnostic information on some of the most common disorders therapists encounter— Adjustment, Panic, Generalized Anxiety, and Posttraumatic Stress Disorders—while establishing and maintaining therapeutic rapport.

In this poignant, intimate and in-depth interview with his son, Victor, Irvin Yalom weaves together the central ideas and key life experiences that have formed the basis for his contributions to psychotherapy.

Whether you’re new to family therapy or seeing a new family client, you need a clear and effective framework to navigate this often treacherous terrain. In this new video, legendary family therapist and genogram innovator Monica McGoldrick demonstrates how to engage and assess a family in the initial stage of treatment.

Do you feel overwhelmed in your work with couples? In this groundbreaking new series with leading EFT trainer Rebecca Jorgensen, you’ll learn an empirically validated approach that will greatly enhance your success in working with couples.

Group Therapy for Addictions: An Interpersonal Relapse Prevention Approach

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by Devin Ashwood & Tim Leighton

Group therapy is a powerful and widely used modality in recovery programs, but too often group leaders lack a coherent and effective clinical framework. This video program will show you how to harness the interpersonal power of groups to work successfully with clients struggling with addictions.

This video set will give you an excellent foundation for mindfulness-based therapy—particularly with clients in recovery. Here, mindfulness experts Dr. Sarah Bowen and Devin Ashwood offer a rich overview and a live group process demonstration using tools from Mindfulness-Based Relapse Prevention (MBRP).

What is “mindfulness” and how can we actually use it with our clients? Understand the principles of mindfulness-oriented psychotherapy and its application for a range of clinical issues in this new video with mindfulness expert Dr. Ronald D. Siegel.

How do you do an assessment, collect historical data, develop a treatment plan and create a warm working alliance with clients all in the first session? Learn from experts John and Rita Sommers-Flanagan how to quickly create the foundation for a successful therapy and engage clients collaboratively in the treatment process.

Severe OCD can seem hopelessly intractable, especially when a client has invested significant time in past therapy. Here, anxiety disorder expert Reid Wilson employs a variation of cognitive and strategic methods in two live sessions, demonstrating his paradoxical approach to tackling obsessive thinking.

In excerpts of sessions with several different clients, Hayes introduces us to creative hopelessness—a process unique to ACT, in which clients examine how controlling and avoiding difficult feelings has diminished the quality of their lives.

Watch Marsha Linehan, founder of Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT), in action in this session with a middle-aged man with a significant personality disorder struggling with suicidal depression and anger after being left by his girlfriend.

What therapists are saying …

“There’s no better way to become a great therapist than to watch great therapists in action. And there’s no better collection of great therapists on video than what’s available on Psychotherapy.net. In this video collection we see how therapists from the past and present use being (the relationship) and doing (technical interventions) to move clients through their problems and toward their potential. I strongly recommend this immensely helpful video collection.”

"You have by far the highest quality selection of psychotherapy videos I have found anywhere. I have purchased seven so far, and each is an invaluable resource in expanding both my own and my students' skills. I plan on keeping and using these for years to come."

"An absolutely incredible collection featuring the leading psychotherapists and counselors of our generation, combined with a state-of-the-art user-friendly interface. Theories are invaluable, but providing students the ability to see actual counseling taking place is necessary to ensure they master the required skills."

--Sam Steen, PhD, Director of Counseling, University of Arizona

Learn from the mastersBe inspired by the leading psychotherapists of our times.